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Thai PM claims election victory with conservatives well ahead of rivals

BBC World 07:22 PM UTC Sun February 08, 2026 Politics
Thai PM claims election victory with conservatives well ahead of rivals

Anutin said his success belonged to "all Thais, no matter whether you voted for us or not", after his party's expected result defied opinion polls that had placed the reformist People's Party ahead.

With 90% of the votes counted, Anutin's Bhumjaithai party is projected to win 194 seats in Bangkok's 500-seat parliament, with the People's Party in second place on 116.

People's Party leader Natthaphong Ruengpanyawut appeared to concede the election, saying he was ready to serve in opposition if Anutin could form a government.

The election was called in December after the coalition led by Anutin collapsed after just three months.

While no party is projected to gain an overall majority, Anutin is now almost certain to stay in office, with his Bhumjaithai likely to have more than double the number of seats it won in the last election in 2023.

Elections in Thailand are often unpredictable, and so it proved this time.

This shock result is a huge disappointment for the People's Party, which had expected to improve on its winning performance three years ago.

But a widely expected "orange wave" of support for its young, idealistic candidates did not materialise.

The party, which under a different name Move Forward won the election in 2023, but was blocked from taking power by the unelected senate, found itself pushed into second place this time by Anutin's pragmatic conservatives.

The reformists will remain in opposition for now. The feared crisis that could have occurred had they won, and once again been barred from office, has been averted.

Opinion polls have frequently been wrong in Thailand, but there will be a lot of post-election analysis of how Anutin turned his once small, provincial Bhumjaithai - "Thai Pride"- party into such a formidable electoral machine.

Playing on patriotic sentiment after the two short border wars with Cambodia last year, Anutin's party became the standard-bearer for conservatives, promising to defend the status of traditional Thai institutions like the monarchy and military.

He campaigned on hard-line nationalist sentiments and populist giveaways - but his victory was also down to his ability to win local power-brokers to his side, in an electoral system where 80% of seats were decided in individual constituencies on a first-past-the-post basis, with the remaining 20% allocated on the proportion of the vote won at a national level.

He also broadened the appeal of his party by putting well-known technocrats with reputations for competence at the heart of his campaign.

The People's Party did much better in the proportional votes, but appears to have lost some of the support it had in 2023, and was unable to overcome its lack of networks at a local level.

The third main contender was the Shinawatra family and its Pheu Thai – "For Thais" – party, which is projected to win 86 seats, a huge drop from its 2023 result.

In the past it dominated elections, with well-marketed populist policies. It formed a coalition administration after Move Forward was blocked in 2023, but had two of its prime ministers dismissed by the notoriously interventionist constitutional court.

Its standing in Thailand was damaged by accusations it had mishandled the conflict with Cambodia, and by its patriarch, former PM Thaksin Shinawatra, being sent to jail last September.

The state of the economy was uppermost in many voters' minds, with household debt at record levels and growth far lower than in previous years.

"I want the economy to improve and I don't want big factories to relocate to our neighbouring countries," civil servant Phananya Bunthong told the BBC, a reference to Thailand falling behind Vietnam.

The People's Party promised big changes, from curbing the power of the biggest businesses and military, to streamlining the extensive bureaucracy and modernising the education system. In the eight years since the movement was founded its radical agenda has been popular with younger Thais.

"I want change. I don't want things to be the same," 28-year-old Kittitat Daengkongkho told the BBC.

But it is clear from the result that this time that agenda was less successful among older people and those in the provinces, than the simpler promises of financial assistance made by Anutin's party.

Alongside the election, Thais also voted in a referendum on whether to reform the 2017 constitution, which was drafted under military rule in 2017.

Critics of the charter believe it gives too much power to unelected institutions like the courts and senate, "handcuffing" the country's democracy.

With over 90% of votes counted, preliminary tallies suggested around 65% had voted in favour.

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